12 5
- How to establish the etiological diagnosis of a patient with Cushing ’ s
syndrome?
The approach to establish the etiological diagnosis of a patient with Cushing’s
syndrome is summarized in the fi gure given below (Fig. 4.8 ).
Etiological Diagnosis of Childhood Cushing’s syndrome
Plasma ACTH 2300h
Plasma ACTH
5-22pg/ml
Plasma ACTH
>22pg/ml
ACTH-dependent
Cushing’s syndrome
Pituitary MRI
Tumor visualized
i.v. CRH,HDDST
Discordant Concordant
Cushing’s disease
i.v. CRH
ACTH <20pg/ml ACTH >20pg/ml
Plasma ACTH
<5pg/ml
ACTH-independent
Cushing’s syndrome
Adrenal CT
Tumor not visualized
IPSS
No ACTH gradient
Cushing’s disease Ectopic Cushing’s
ACTH gradient
- Adrenal adenoma
- Adrenal carcinoma
- PPNAD
Fig. 4.8 Approach to a child for differential diagnosis of Cushing’s syndrome
- What is the role of MRI in localization of pituitary tumor in children with
Cushing ’ s disease?
Cushing’s disease is the commonest cause of CS in children above 5 years of
age. Majority of the ACTH-secreting pituitary tumors are microadenomas
and the tumor is commonly <5 mm. Contrast-enhanced MRI sella is the pre-
ferred imaging modality to localize pituitary adenoma in children with
Cushing’s disease. On MR sellar imaging, microadenomas are visualized as
hypointense lesions as compared to normally enhancing pituitary tissue after
contrast administration (differential enhancement). The sensitivity of conven-
tional CEMRI to localize a pituitary microadenoma in children is approxi-
mately 50 %; however, despite localization on MRI, concordance rate with
surgery is only 50 %. Recently, it has been shown that use of spoiled gradient
recalled acquisition MRI (SPGR-MRI) is associated with improved sensitiv-
ity (75 %) and accuracy (88 %) as compared to conventional MRI (Figs. 4.9
and 4.10 ).
4 Childhood Cushing’s Syndrome